Science, scent, scenery, scythe, scenario.
I know this is for an English or Language assignment. ^^
scent
scythe
scenic, science, scent
In classical Latin, the letter c was always pronounced "hard" - like k. So "Caesar" was pronounced Kai-sar, not See-zar as it is today. The combination "sc" was always pronounced "sk" in Latin.
It is pronounced as - Glo-sc-ow
As "sk" like in "skill".
The s in "asphalt" is pronounced as a z sound, similar to the sound in words like "zero" or "zebra."
vaccinate accentuate accept eccentric occipital accident (many more)
The SC pair forms an S sound in many words, and the CK pair is pronounced as a K. The pair CT is sometimes pronounced as T.SC wordsccience, scientist, abscess, acquiesce, scissors, rescind, scene. scent, muscle, ascent, descentCH wordsyachtCT wordsindictmentSome proper names have a silent C such as Tucson.
The "s" in umbrellas is pronounced with a "z" sound.
No, they do not rhyme. While they both end in "scotch," the pronunciation of the "sc" is different in each word. In "scotch" it is pronounced as a hard "k" sound, while in "butterscotch" it is pronounced as a soft "s" sound.
Kimi Räikkönen, a Finnish formula driver has a good example of a Finnish accent. Finnish is pronounced almost exactly as its written, which shows in the accent. The R, V, P and some other letters are also quite sharp.